If your sunroom leaks after rain, bakes in summer heat, or looks nothing like the rest of your home, a proper remodel can fix all of it - and bring the space up to current Florida wind standards at the same time.

Sunroom remodeling in West Palm Beach means updating, expanding, or fully rebuilding a glass-enclosed room attached to your home, with most jobs taking one to four weeks of active construction depending on how much of the existing structure is being kept.
The scope can range from replacing old windows and a leaking roof to a complete tear-out with new framing, impact-rated glass, and HVAC connections. What drives the decision is usually the condition of the existing foundation and whether the current structure can meet today's Florida wind-load requirements. Many West Palm Beach homeowners who start out thinking they need a cosmetic refresh discover during an on-site assessment that the framing or slab needs attention first. Pairing a sunroom remodel with a sunroom design consultation helps you get the layout right the first time rather than patching a room that will need more work later.
West Palm Beach's older neighborhoods - Flamingo Park, Northwood, El Cid - have homes built in the 1940s through 1970s where sunrooms often hide outdated wiring or cracked slabs beneath the surface. A thorough site assessment before any contract is signed keeps those surprises from becoming mid-project change orders.
If you stop using your sunroom entirely from May through October because it is simply too hot, the room is not insulated or ventilated for West Palm Beach's climate. A properly remodeled sunroom with the right glass and a connection to your home's cooling system should be comfortable year-round. Getting only four or five months of use out of a room that takes up real square footage is a clear sign something needs to change.
Water stains on the ceiling or drafts around window frames after heavy rain mean the roof flashing, window seals, or caulking has failed. West Palm Beach gets intense afternoon thunderstorms, and water intrusion leads quickly to mold, rotting framing, and interior damage - all of which cost far more to fix than a timely remodel. A musty smell after rain is an early warning to act on.
Older West Palm Beach sunrooms often have single-pane windows or early double-pane units where the seal between the glass layers has failed, leaving a permanent foggy appearance. Single-pane glass provides almost no heat or noise insulation, and failed double-pane units mean the insulating gas has escaped. Either condition means your windows are actively working against your comfort and your energy bill.
If your sunroom was built before Palm Beach County updated its wind-load requirements in the mid-2000s, it almost certainly does not have impact-rated glass or hurricane-compliant framing connections. Your homeowner's insurance may not fully cover storm damage to a non-compliant structure, and the room is genuinely more vulnerable in a major storm. A licensed contractor can assess compliance during a free estimate visit.
We handle everything from targeted component replacements to full rebuilds. If your existing room is structurally sound, a window replacement, roof reseal, and interior refresh can transform the space without tearing everything out. If the structure has issues, we rebuild on a solid foundation and tie in screen room installation or full glazing depending on how you want to use the space. For homeowners who want a more comprehensive update, we also offer new sunroom design services so the finished room feels like it was always part of the house rather than an afterthought.
Every remodeling project starts with a free on-site assessment where we look at your existing foundation, framing, windows, and roof. We give you a written estimate that breaks out labor, materials, and permit fees so you can compare proposals side by side. Nothing begins until you have reviewed the numbers and signed off.
Best for homeowners whose existing structure is sound but whose glass, seals, or hardware have failed or no longer meet current wind standards.
Suits homeowners dealing with leaks, soft spots, or a roof system that was not properly flashed when originally installed.
Ideal for rooms with a compromised foundation, outdated framing, or structural damage that makes patching less cost-effective than starting fresh.
For homeowners who want to convert an existing three season or uninsulated room into a fully climate-controlled four season space.
Palm Beach County sits in a high-velocity wind zone, which means the Florida Building Code requires sunroom glass, framing, and roof connections to meet strict wind-resistance standards. For you as a homeowner, this means your contractor cannot use standard residential windows - they must use impact-rated products. This adds to upfront cost, but it also means your sunroom will not need to be boarded up each hurricane season. We serve homeowners throughout West Palm Beach, including those in Lake Worth Beach and Boynton Beach, where the same Palm Beach County wind requirements and older housing stock apply.
West Palm Beach averages over 230 sunny days a year, and summer humidity regularly sits above 80 percent. A sunroom that is not properly insulated and ventilated becomes an oven by mid-morning from May through October - meaning the choice of glass and roof insulation is not an optional upgrade here. Beyond climate, a large share of West Palm Beach neighborhoods have HOA architectural review requirements that can add two to six weeks to your project timeline if you do not start the approval process early. We help you prepare that submission so the approval step does not delay construction. You can review window efficiency guidance from the U.S. Department of Energy to understand how glass selection affects your cooling costs in a hot climate.
We respond within one business day to schedule your free on-site estimate. During the visit we assess the existing structure, foundation, windows, and roof - and flag anything that could affect scope or cost.
After the site visit you receive a written proposal that breaks out labor, materials, permit fees, and any site prep work. We walk through it line by line so you know exactly what you are paying for.
We apply for the City of West Palm Beach building permit and help you prepare HOA submission documents if your neighborhood requires them. Plan for two to six weeks for this step - we account for it in your project timeline from the start.
Active construction runs one to four weeks depending on scope. A city inspector visits at key stages to verify the work meets code. We handle scheduling. Once the final inspection is passed and the permit closed, the project is complete - with full documentation you keep.
Free estimate, written quote, no pressure. We respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1833We inspect the foundation, framing, and existing glass before writing a single line of the estimate. In West Palm Beach's older neighborhoods - Flamingo Park, Northwood, El Cid - surprises inside walls are common. Finding them upfront keeps change orders off your bill.
Every window, door, and roof panel we install meets Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements. We do not substitute standard residential products to lower a bid. Compliant materials mean a passed inspection, valid insurance coverage, and a room that holds up in a storm.
The City of West Palm Beach building permit process and HOA architectural reviews can feel overwhelming. We manage both from start to finish - submitting drawings, scheduling inspections, and keeping you updated. You do not make a single call to a government office.
We follow the code of ethics and best-practice standards set by the National Association of the Remodeling Industry. That means written contracts, transparent pricing, and a project that is fully documented when we leave. You can learn more about those standards at nari.org.
Taken together, these practices mean you get a finished room that is permitted, compliant, and built to last in South Florida's climate - not a room that passes visual inspection today but causes problems in the next hurricane season.
A lower-cost alternative to full enclosure - ideal for homeowners who want insect protection and airflow without climate control.
Learn MoreWork through layout, materials, and finish selections before construction begins so the finished room feels intentional, not improvised.
Learn MoreHurricane season does not wait - lock in your project date before the fall schedule fills up.